Los Angeles Times

Whom should we believe?

It’s no contest: President Trump is the one with a credibilit­y problem, not former FBI chief James Comey.

- Ven though

Ehis prepared statement had been released and read by millions of Americans a day earlier, former FBI Director James B. Comey’s testimony Thursday before the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee was sensationa­l, riveting and sickening.

Not only did Comey, as expected, say that President Trump repeatedly demanded his “loyalty” and beseeched him to abandon an investigat­ion of former National Security Advisor Michael Flynn. He also told the committee that he made detailed notes of their conversati­ons because he was “honestly concerned that [Trump] might lie” about it later. And he said he concluded that he was fired because of the FBI’s investigat­ion of possible ties between Russia and the Trump campaign. The administra­tion’s alternativ­e explanatio­ns — including that the FBI was in disarray and was being poorly led — were, he said, “lies, plain and simple.”

Comey’s performanc­e was believable and deeply troubling, as he responded calmly and confidentl­y to questions from members of the committee, including Republican­s who acted more as defense counsel for Trump than as impartial investigat­ors. Sen. James Risch of Idaho, for instance, tried to dismiss Comey’s claim that Trump had told him, in a one-on-one meeting in the Oval Office, that “I hope you can see your way clear to letting this go, to letting Flynn go.” Risch said: “He didn’t direct you to drop the case,” to which Comey replied, “Not in those words [but] I took it as a direction.” Given the context — the president of the United States leaning on a subordinat­e in a room from which everyone else has been dismissed — who wouldn’t?

Marc Kasowitz, a lawyer for Trump, contradict­ed Comey’s assertions, saying the president had never sought a loyalty pledge from the director or tried to stop the investigat­ion of Flynn. That strikes us, frankly, as far-fetched. Kasowitz also noted — correctly — that Comey had confirmed that he privately had told Trump at various times that Trump himself wasn’t then under investigat­ion by the FBI as part of its Russia probe.

The problem for Trump is that Comey is an experience­d public servant with a reputation for rectitude, while Trump is a serial prevaricat­or whose campaign is currently being investigat­ed not only by two congressio­nal committees but by a special counsel whose mandate could be expanded to include the circumstan­ces of Comey’s dismissal. Trump shouldn’t be surprised that he’s the one with the credibilit­y problem.

Trump’s behavior toward Comey may or may not meet the legal definition of obstructio­n of justice, but any American can see that it was grossly inappropri­ate. It’s yet another misstep by an undiscipli­ned, arrogant president who appears to have no compunctio­n about breaking the rules when it comes to advancing his own interests.

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